ltrace 0.7.3-6.1ubuntu6.23.10.1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

ltrace (0.7.3-6.1ubuntu6.23.10.1) mantic; urgency=medium

  * Fix ltrace on binaries compiled on recent Ubuntu releases (LP: #1992939)
    - debian/patches/lp1992939-add-intel-cet-support.patch, thanks to DJ Delorie

 -- Ravi Kant Sharma <email address hidden>  Mon, 15 Jan 2024 11:37:21 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Ravi Kant Sharma
Sponsored by:
Simon Chopin
Uploaded to:
Mantic
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
linux-any
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Mantic updates universe utils

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
ltrace_0.7.3.orig.tar.bz2 471.3 KiB 0e6f8c077471b544c06def7192d983861ad2f8688dd5504beae62f0c5f5b9503
ltrace_0.7.3-6.1ubuntu6.23.10.1.debian.tar.xz 52.0 KiB ee3d11bf4b66c0d7d153b81b53be86ae65034d363e864fac5ed16d3ce0da456f
ltrace_0.7.3-6.1ubuntu6.23.10.1.dsc 1.6 KiB 06e10579a0496adfaad762ea7ff672aaf9ba968c9fc9e220da705c79611e25e5

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Binary packages built by this source

ltrace: Tracks runtime library calls in dynamically linked programs

 ltrace is a debugging program which runs a specified command until it
 exits. While the command is executing, ltrace intercepts and records
 the dynamic library calls which are called by
 the executed process and the signals received by that process.
 It can also intercept and print the system calls executed by the program.
 .
 The program to be traced need not be recompiled for this, so you can
 use it on binaries for which you don't have the source handy.
 .
 You should install ltrace if you need a sysadmin tool for tracking the
 execution of processes.

ltrace-dbgsym: debug symbols for ltrace